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1 MONITORING STATE PROGRESS TO PROTECT CHILDREN & YOUNG PEOPLE FROM TRAFFICKING FOR SEXUAL PURPOSES A CALL FOR ACCELERATED ACTION FROM STATES: IT S IN YOUR HANDS!

2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS MONITORING STATE PROGRESS TO PROTECT CHILDREN & YOUNG PEOPLE FROM TRAFFICKING FOR SEXUAL PURPOSES A CALL FOR ACCELERATED ACTION FROM STATES: IT S IN YOUR HANDS! This publication was compiled by Sendrine Constant, under the guidance and assistance of Carmen Madriñan and Mark Capaldi. The support of a number of ECPAT International Secretariat staff was greatly appreciated (Alessia Altamura, Caroline Liou, Jessica Allen, Manida Naebklang, Kritsana Pimonsaengsuriya, Patchareeboon Sakulpitakphon, Maricruz Tabbia, and Maria Thundu). ECPAT International wishes to acknowledge and extend its special thanks to all the partners that have contributed their knowledge and expertise to review the assessment of the 41 countries presented here. ECPAT International also wishes to gratefully acknowledge the feedback given by Christopher Davis and Myriam Galopin of the Global Campaigns Team of The Body Shop International. January 2010 ECPAT International 328/1 Phayathai Road, Ratchathewi Bangkok, THAILAND Tel: K: Fax: Website: The Body Shop International PLC Watersmead, Littlehampton, West Sussex, UK Tel: Website: The copyright of this Report is jointly owned by ECPAT International and The Body Shop International PLC. Not to be reproduced, copied or otherwise without the prior permission of ECPAT International and The Body Shop International PLC. 2

3 CONTENTS LIST OF COUNTRIES REVIEWED AND CONTRIBUTING PARTNERS 4 PREFACE 6 FOREWORD BY THE UN SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE SALE OF CHILDREN, CHILD PROSTITUTION AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY 7 INTRODUCTION 8 A. CHILD TRAFFICKING FOR SEXUAL PURPOSES: A WORLDWIDE PHENOMENON AFFECTING MILLIONS 9 B. ECPAT INTERNATIONAL AND THE BODY SHOP STOP SEX TRAFFICKING OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE CAMPAIGN 11 C. COUNTRY PROGRESS CARDS: ASSESSING STATE ACTION 12 D. THE PROGRESS CARD SYSTEM 14 HOPELESS CAUSE OR CAUSE FOR HOPE? 18 PROGRESS CARDS CONTINUUM 19 A. PREVENTION: COMMUNITY-BASED PREVENTION PROGRAMMES TO STOP CHILD TRAFFICKING ARE REACHING AT-RISK POPULATIONS 20 B. LEGAL FRAMEWORK: INTERNATIONAL LEGAL STANDARDS FOR PROTECTING CHILDREN FROM TRAFFICKING ARE INCLUDED IN THE NATIONAL LEGAL FRAMEWORK 29 C. CARE: SPECIALISED GOVERNMENT SERVICES FOR CHILD VICTIMS OF TRAFFICKING ARE INTEGRATED INTO NATIONAL POLICIES 37 CONCLUSION AND WAY FORWARD 45 3

5 Countries South Korea Spain Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Thailand Turkey Contributing Partners Naeil Women s Center for Youth, ECPAT Affiliate ECPAT Spain ECPAT Sweden ECPAT Switzerland ECPAT Taiwan ECPAT International International Children s Center (ICC) and the Network against Commercial Sexual Exploitation in Turkey UK ECPAT UK 1 USA ECPAT USA 1. In the UK, the campaign will pursue specific and targeted indicators for the goals of the campaign. These will be identified in the separate Country Booklet for the UK. Furthermore, in the UK, parameters used to define specific services vary please refer to the Country Booklet for more detail. 5

6 PREFACE All members of society have a role to play in protecting the rights and well-being of children, while government has the responsibility to ensure their realisation. Public participation in safeguarding against violations perpetrated against children worldwide, such as child trafficking for sexual purposes, is essential and serves to strengthen the framework of child protection that extends from family outward to community, society and the state. Although the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) was the first among human rights treaties to acknowledge and invite the alliance and contributions from all sectors of society in the reporting and monitoring of the rights of the child (and urged governments to reflect this in the preparation of their country reports), the engagement of the broader public to support more specialised children s organisations and private sector partners in advocating for children and conveying a society-wide intolerance for any form of violence against a child, must still be mobilised worldwide. Too frequently the public lacks adequate quality information set in an accessible form to empower their direct action for children, be it through reporting breaches they encounter or to seek accountability from those responsible for taking action. This is the key aim of The Body Shop and ECPAT International partnership and the global Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and Young People campaign. Violations against children remain hidden and unknown and children s interests are yet to be pursued as a central and distinct concern or as cause for social action, such as found in environmental protection, gender equity or other social movements. Yet, the rights of children generate obligations that must be fulfilled through transparent public policies and programmes that can be monitored for their impact on children s lives. Often, countries undertake important legislative and programmatic initiatives to promote and advance the child s right to protection. Others remain as legal principles that are not translated into practice. The Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and Young People campaign seeks to bring key policy decisions and initiatives that are instrumental to the realisation of a child s right to protection from sex trafficking and exploitation into the public arena by translating them into tangible and relevant information that will elicit broad interest and enable the participation of a wide public to scrutinise governmental action for children, monitor its impact and provide support to accelerate positive change. The progress card system elaborated in this report presents how states are meeting their obligations through globally agreed goals and indicators to prevent and protect children from sex trafficking and to ensure that child victims can access the necessary care and support services. The progress cards will be updated throughout the three-year campaign and will drive the campaign s communication and advocacy strategy as well as ensure that progress is attained in stopping trafficking of children for sexual purposes. 6

7 FOREWORD Millions of children and young people under the age of 18 are trafficked every year. The majority of these minors are affected by sexual exploitation: the International Labour Organization (ILO) 2 estimates on child labour indicate that 1.2 million victims of trafficking are children under 18, mainly trafficked for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation. The 2009 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Global Report on Trafficking in Persons 3 suggests 79% of the trafficked victims identified in 52 countries worldwide (both adults and children) were subjected to sexual exploitation. In the relevant key international and regional instruments ratified by many countries, sexual exploitation of children is considered a gross violation of a child s right their to respect of their human dignity and physical and mental integrity and cannot be condoned under any circumstances. During the three World Congresses against Sexual Exploitation of Children (Stockholm in 1996, Yokohama in 2001 and Rio de Janeiro in November 2008), global commitments were agreed to by the participant countries to prevent, prohibit and stop sexual exploitation of children and adolescents and to provide the necessary support to children who have fallen victim to it. Despite all these efforts, key challenges still persist. Therefore, a simple question should be raised: Are children and their rights efficiently protected? Unfortunately not! Specific breaches and inadequacies in the implementation of measures to combat child trafficking are highlighted in this publication. Despite significant efforts, much still needs to be done to protect, rehabilitate and reintegrate victims, to provide reparation for damage caused to children, sanction the guilty, change certain social norms, and ultimately prevent this phenomenon. Preventing and combating this multidimensional and complex phenomenon is directly linked to the capacity of a society to adopt a holistic approach to the fundamental rights of children. This necessarily involves efficient and concerted cooperation and coordination at national, regional and international levels. This global partnership between ECPAT and The Body Shop is a wonderful example of such an approach and brings forth opportunities to highlight major gaps and challenges to protect children and raise public awareness and attention given to the additional efforts still needed by states to turn commitments into concrete actions resulting in the full respect of the rights of the child. As UN Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, I will lobby and join hands with this campaign, especially in this year which celebrates the 20th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Dr Najat M JID MAALLA UN Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography 2. ILO. Commercial sexual exploitation of children and adolescents - The ILO s response. Geneva. 3. UNODC. Global Report on Trafficking in Persons Available from: 7

8 INTRODUCTION Despite the acknowledged obligation to afford special protection and care to children, which is set out in various international instruments, most countries largely fail to uphold children s rights in a comprehensive way. Gaps in the framework required for the full protection of a child opens opportunities for exploiters to abuse children and allows the trafficking of children and young people to be perpetuated so that it now accounts as one of the three top most lucrative criminal activities. Ensuring a meticulous and regular monitoring of the measures implemented to protect children and their effectiveness is therefore essential to identifying challenges and priorities and adequately informing policies and programming. Monitoring the implementation of states actions to fulfil their commitments on child rights and in particular the right of the child to be protected from sexual exploitation, including trafficking, is the main mandate of ECPAT International. Based on its experiences and the work of its global network, ECPAT International has undertaken to examine progress accomplished by 41 states to secure a safer world for children in line with specific goals and indicators derived from previously agreed international commitments, and in particular the 2008 Rio de Janeiro Declaration and Call for Action to Prevent and Stop Sexual Exploitation of Children 4 (a recent outcome of the deliberations of over 3,500 participants at the World Congress III against Sexual Exploitation of Children and Adolescents). To increase the accountability on commitments made to children, this monitoring initiative is a specific activity contributing to raising global awareness and advocacy through the three-year Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and Young People campaign conducted in partnership between ECPAT International and The Body Shop. It aims at scrutinising states progress to turn binding and moral agreements into concrete positive outcomes for children around the world through specific and measurable actions contributing to the enhancement of global child protection from sex trafficking. Through the campaign, civil society initiatives will simultaneously be stepped up through the work of ECPAT groups and others at the national level and the public, to support governments in fulfilling their responsibilities. 4. The Rio de Janeiro Declaration and Call for Action to Prevent and Stop Sexual Exploitation of Children. November Available from: 8

9 A. CHILD TRAFFICKING FOR SEXUAL PURPOSES: A WORLDWIDE PHENOMENON AFFECTING MILLIONS The trafficking of children for sexual exploitation is a complex issue that varies by region or country. It includes a wide range of situations involving the recruitment and transportation of children for sexually exploitative practices, including prostitution, the making of pornography and forced marriage. Children may be taken away from their home through deception or by force. Occasionally, desperate parents sell children to traffickers. Trafficked children often experience dangerous and clandestine journeys. After being moved, child victims of trafficking are often intimidated through abuse, beatings or rape to force them into submission and may be repeatedly sold. The psychological and physical injury is often profound, and children are too frightened or ashamed to ask for help. Their lives or the lives of their families may be threatened if they try to escape. Authorities may not provide adequate protection for children who escape their abusers, leaving them vulnerable to further exploitation. 5 An estimated 1.2 million child victims are trafficked for sexual exploitation or cheap labour. 6 Human trafficking is the third largest international crime, worth billions of dollars each year. 7 Nearly 80% of all trafficking worldwide is for sexual exploitation. 8 Among identified cases, the proportion of minors involved in all forms of human trafficking increased between 2003 and 2007, from about 15% to nearly 22%. 9 Domestic trafficking is a problem in 64% of the 170 countries reviewed. 10 The Among Trafficking identified cases, Protocol the proportion defines of minors child involved trafficking in all forms as: of human trafficking increased between 2003 and 2007, The from about recruitment, 15% to nearly transportation, 22%. 9 transfer, harbouring or receipt of a child for the purpose of exploitation Domestic trafficking: shall a be problem considered in 64% of trafficking the 170 countries in persons reviewed. even if this does not involve any of 10 the means that define trafficking in adults. Children and young people trafficked for the purpose of sexual exploitation are usually moved from poorer areas to richer and more profitable places and regions. This relocation may occur across borders or within a country. Various factors make children vulnerable to trafficking. These include socio-economic factors, family abuse or neglect, a lack of appropriate care and protection systems, minority and gender discrimination, deteriorating situations, such as social and armed conflicts and natural disasters, that leave children exposed to abuse and violence due to the absence or inefficiency of protective mechanisms. An important factor fuelling trafficking is the demand for sexual services that target and favour the young, which is linked to social tolerance and a lack of appropriate law enforcement. 5. ECPAT International and The Body Shop. Their Protection is in Our Hands The State of Global Child Trafficking for Sexual Purposes. Bangkok. August 2009, 6. UNICEF, 2007, see: 7. UNODC. Global Report on Trafficking in Persons Available from: 8. Ibid. 9. Ibid. 10. Ibid. 9

10 A. CHILD TRAFFICKING FOR SEXUAL PURPOSES: A WORLDWIDE PHENOMENON AFFECTING MILLIONS Global Overview - Child Trafficking Routes From Asia To North America Transnational - Transcontinental Regional - Transnational THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS - INCREASED RISKS TO HUMAN TRAFFICKING, IN PARTICULAR OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN According to the US State Department, millions of people around the world are living in debt bondage and the global financial crisis has made many more vulnerable to labour and sex trafficking. This year there is a new urgency, highlighted Hillary Clinton, US Secretary of State, in the preface of the Trafficking in Persons Report Various organisations are warning against an increase in human trafficking linked to the global financial crisis, and victims are already being identified. The economic crisis fuels human trafficking in Cambodia 11 A survey conducted in April-May 2009 among 357 women and girls aged currently working in Phnom Penh s entertainment sector, including brothel workers, street workers, karaoke workers, and massage parlour workers revealed the following: During the crisis, increased numbers of women have entered the sex trade, coming from declining working conditions, such as in the garment sector, where they experienced long working hours and low pay; and Debt bondage to sex establishment owners has increased, with an increasing proportion of cash going toward remittances to families. 12 Most child victims of sex trafficking are girls, but boys are also affected, and due to lack of awareness and recognition of their victimisation they often encounter a serious lack of preventative and protective services. Children are recruited through organised criminal networks but also deceived by acquaintances and family members or through false job offers and unsafe migration practices. 11. The Phnom Penh Post. 10 June Accessed from: United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking. Cambodia: Exodus to the Sex Trade? Effects of the global financial crisis on women s working conditions and opportunities. Accessed on 20 July 2009 from: 10

11 B. ECPAT INTERNATIONAL AND THE BODY SHOP STOP SEX TRAFFICKING OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE CAMPAIGN The partnership between the ECPAT network and The Body Shop is a unique one. For the first time an international network of local grassroots NGOs is working in partnership with a major cosmetics company to raise awareness to stop sex trafficking of children and young people. The originality and force of the Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and Young People campaign lies not only in the immediate relief brought to children who have been affected through funds raised, but also in particular, through the long-term changes it aspires to create by building awareness amongst the public and facilitating the voice of the consumer to be heard by those with decision-making power to strengthen concerted action against child trafficking for sexual purposes. The campaign, as presented below, is structured around a combination of awareness-raising and advocacy activities at global and local levels in order to make a real difference, raising awareness, inspiring and mobilising those with decision-making power to effect change with due urgency. 13 Building understanding on key issues related to child sex trafficking - Their Protection is in Your Hands: The State of Global Child Trafficking for Sexual Purposes - Specific baseline information, a key resource to increase global awareness and build understanding on the issue -Present main action agendas to key stakeholders Voicing global concerns through global advocacy platforms based on - Global assessment of the States actions to protect children examining and highlighting progress and specific gaps in countries for the protection of children from sex trafficking - Informing the public on actions that must be taken at national and global levels to combat child sex trafficking Bringing immediate relief to children - Support grassroots projects through funds raised from the sale of The Body Shop products - Based on specifically identified country challenges and gaps Raising awareness on child sex trafficking at the local level - Specific campaign activities at the country level build public awareness on the issue through dissemination of specialised information on child sex trafficking Mobilising governments in the protection of children - Specific and systematic assessment of a State s progress to protect children through Country Progress Cards - Identify country-specific challenges and gaps Ensuring States accountability to protect children - Detailed country reports and documentation of States measures - Regular monitoring of States actions - Global database widely publicised 13. Carmen Madriñán, Executive Director, ECPAT International. 11

12 C. COUNTRY PROGRESS CARDS: ASSESSING STATE ACTION The Stop Sex Trafficking of Children & Young People campaign aspires to bring positive and visible long-term effects on child protection from sex trafficking by building on the momentum created during the World Congress III against Sexual Exploitation of Children and Adolescents 14 held in Rio de Janeiro in November 2008, and involving the wider public in the call for governments to honour their commitments to children. ECPAT International and The Body Shop will closely and regularly monitor progress of action taken on specific commitments and promises that have been made by states to uphold the rights of the child to protection from sex trafficking and all forms of commercial sexual exploitation. States progress in addressing the issue of child trafficking and ensuring a safer world for children from these violations will be monitored on a regular basis over the three years of the campaign through specially-designed tools. A series of colour-coded progress cards will be used to illustrate the State s actions in implementing three specific goals, identified based on corresponding international commitments and selected for their significant impact on the prevention of trafficking and protection of child victims. SPAIN Global scoring Q Q (Partially compliant but making significant efforts to address child trafficking) Community-based prevention programmes 1.1. Prevention 1.2. Collaboration 1.3. Awareness raising * 1.4. Teachers training Legal Framework 2.1. Optional Protocol 2.2. Trafficking Protocol 2.3. National legislation 2.4. Special Police Units Specialised services for child victims 3.1. Helpline 3.2. Shelters 3.3. Medical Services 3.4. Counselling Services * Progress card Spain: compiled based on information provided by Debora D Alleva, ACIM-ECPAT España It is expected that effective implementation of measures to achieve these three specific goals will result in better protection for children across the world. Through their participation in the campaign, the public will be significantly more aware of the various issues related to child trafficking and able, in the long term, to call for comprehensive and integrated strategies to address the problem and prevent it, while also ensuring that wherever needed, child victims will be able to access a broad and inclusive range of services to support their recovery. These goals include: 1. Community-based prevention programmes to stop child trafficking are reaching at-risk populations; 2. International legal standards for protecting children from trafficking have been incorporated into the national legal framework; and 3. Specialised government services for child victims of trafficking are integrated into national policies. 14. For more information, please see 12

13 C. COUNTRY PROGRESS CARDS: ASSESSING STATE ACTION In order to estimate the level of progress towards these goals, four indicators have been developed that provide some measure of overall achievement of the goals. The findings of this review are to be presented in a progress card matrix which will provide a visual index of the level of action for each indicator by specific countries. Three colours are used to indicate a significant (GREEN), partial (YELLOW) or inadequate (RED) level of state action being implemented to achieve the goals. Data will be collected regularly to input into these matrices, which will be reviewed and updated to monitor on-going actions and progress achieved in a specific country. This will contribute to a national and global analysis of the level of state attention being given to uphold child rights to adequate protection from trafficking. The data collection will be undertaken through a variety of informants from UN bodies, government, non-governmental organisations and other stakeholders involved in anti-trafficking measures, research and policy documents available from international and local sources, largely supported by ECPAT s experiences in monitoring progress on the implementation of the Agenda for Action in 77 countries around the world. 15 The involvement of local partners, 16 which are all specifically working on child trafficking and sexual exploitation of children in the countries selected, is crucial, as they can provide critical insight into the situation of child trafficking for sexual purposes at a given time, based on concrete work and specific expertise. Considering the complexity and the inter-relationship between state and non-state actions, some assessment made on the baseline indicators may be limited to the time of accessing the information and its availability. However, all efforts have been made to ensure that each assessment is supported by specific references and a critical analysis, which will be detailed and provided in the country progress cards. Due to limited data collection and disaggregation of information on child trafficking for sexual purposes, accurate estimates of the number of children affected worldwide are impossible. As such, this report assesses a countries progress only in relation to the policies that the Government has enacted and not on the basis of estimates of the scale of the problem. As such, the ranking does not factor into the extent to which a country is a place of origin, transit or destination for child sex trafficking. The existence of policies to combat child trafficking within any given country is considered to be the first fundamental step to trigger allocation of human and financial resources for concrete action, as well as providing a tool for the public to call for accountability. Thus, it is judged to be a robust indicator of progress. The benefits of this tool are multiple and lie in the ability to provide straightforward and precise information on the level of State protection on child trafficking, which can also reach and inform the wider public. It enables country comparisons based on uniform indicators and global analysis supported by aggregated information. It is a dynamic tool that facilitates regular monitoring and upfront appraisal of progress or regress of government efforts. Anchored upon three core elements of a comprehensive strategy to combat child trafficking (prevention, protection and assistance), it supports an immediate overview of the main challenges and gaps in addressing child trafficking, while providing a useful baseline for informing campaigns and advocacy activities at national and global levels. The essence of these progress cards is to provide clarity on government actions and thereby hold states accountable for policies and measures taken to meet their obligations towards children. This is achieved through a scrupulous analysis of the information available to support assessment of various indicators. 15. ECPAT International. Global Monitoring Reports on Status of Action against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children - Country reports A full list of participating partners is given following the Acknowledgements. 13

14 D. THE PROGRESS CARD SYSTEM A series of four indicators have been developed to inform the level of progress made towards achieving each of the three goals and advancements made towards their full implementation on a country-by-country basis. The critical examination and rigorous analysis of the actions implemented by the state under the 12 defined indicators provide a measure and sets milestones to determine progress towards overall achievement of each set of goals. The relevance of these indicators for ensuring that children can fully exercise their fundamental rights enabled by a protective environment created through state programmes is presented below. The rationale for selecting each of these indicators is substantiated by their significance in contributing to the achievement of the three specific goals and providing a comprehensive level of protection for children from sex trafficking. GOAL 1 Community-based prevention programmes to stop child trafficking are reaching at-risk populations Preventing children from falling prey to sex traffickers is the first step that must be taken in the range of comprehensive measures needed to guarantee the protection of children. Prevention encompasses a broad range of multi-dimensional interventions, from mobilisation and awareness building among families and the general public to more targeted and specific interventions that reach children who are vulnerable and at-risk due to specific conditions in their lives State policy provision for implementation of community-based prevention programmes on child trafficking 1.2. State policy provides for wide multi-stakeholder collaboration on child trafficking prevention 1.3. State implements or fully supports awareness raising programmes 1.4. Policy provision for teacher training curriculum to include information on CSEC The establishment of a national policy to prevent child trafficking demonstrates the extent to which a State has prioritised such efforts in its specific agendas and legislation and provided directives for action to the relevant implementing bodies. Wide stakeholder collaboration involving ministerial agencies, NGOs, inter-governmental organisations, private sector, children, academia or others ensures a more accurate analysis of the problem, greater relevance and larger reach of the prevention measures. Public education and awareness of child trafficking is crucial and can effectively reach the target population only through a sustained multi-media approach combining visual, audio or written information and sensitisation activities to increase knowledge and engage the public in counteracting the crime. School is one of the main loci for prevention and awareness raising activities on specific risks and social problems at an early stage of childhood, and essential information and capacity building on the issue must be compulsorily delivered to teachers at a very early stage. 14

15 D. THE PROGRESS CARD SYSTEM GOAL 2 International legal standards for protecting children from trafficking have been incorporated into the national framework Strong laws in line with international instruments, as well as effective enforcement procedures that are child-sensitive, are of crucial importance to protect children from all forms of sexual exploitation, including child trafficking for sexual purposes. 17 Progress made towards this goal is assessed through a tripartite framework of international/national standards and their enforcement through a child and gender-sensitive process that avoids any possible re-traumatisation or re-victimisation of the child The State has ratified the Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography to the Convention on the Rights of the Child (OPSC) 2.2. The State has ratified the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children (Trafficking Protocol) 2.3. The State has harmonised national law in line with the Trafficking Protocol 2.4. The State has established a special police unit to combat crimes against children, including trafficking and sexual exploitation Ratification of the OPSC demonstrates that a state has agreed to be bound to the international principles outlined in the OPSC, such as the criminalisation of the different forms of child sexual exploitation and jurisdiction of the State over these offences; but also encouraging international cooperation, and providing support to child survivors. Being bound by the Trafficking Protocol implies that the state has adopted a comprehensive and uniform definition of trafficking in children and established criminal responsibilities over all the different acts constituting child trafficking, contributing to creating a common ground for countertrafficking activities globally. Harmonising national legislation with international standards results in establishing a common protective framework where the rights of the child can be guaranteed holistically and uniformly and the prosecution of these crimes can be enforced through clearly identified definitions and standards. To limit some of the challenges of investigating sexual crimes against children (difficulties in gathering material evidence and testimony, identifying victims and witnesses, ensuring additional protection needed where the victim is a child) specificallytrained police units should be established based on child-sensitive approaches to minimise the traumatic experience of judicial proceedings for child victims of trafficking. 17. ECPAT International. Strengthening Laws Addressing Child Sexual Exploitation. Thailand Available at 15

16 D. THE PROGRESS CARD SYSTEM GOAL 3 Specialised government services for child victims of trafficking are integrated into national policies Child victims of trafficking enjoy specific rights to protection that entail receiving appropriate care and assistance without discrimination to provide for their special needs. The state is required to take a systematic integrated approach to the delivery of a full range of specialised services to restore the rights of the victims and support a long-term and effective recovery The State has established a helpline for child victims of trafficking 3.2. The State has established shelters for child victims of sexual exploitation, including trafficking 3.3. The State has established medical services for child victims of sexual exploitation, including trafficking 3.4. The State has established psychological counselling services for child victims of sexual exploitation, including trafficking The establishment of an emergency phone or Internet-based service that is free, anonymous and accessible by all children at risk or victims of trafficking on a 24-hourly basis can provide assistance and facilitate access to relevant services to protect children. Shelters or care homes provide safe accommodation where support services can be given in a planned and professionally guided way. Accommodation schemes for children must be specialised and separated from adults to provide immediate protection from physical harm and personal safety, food and other assistance services that children are entitled to. Child victims of trafficking require specialised medical support, including emergency aid, sexual health and drug rehabilitation services. Appropriate medical examinations should be freely offered and delivered in a child sensitive way by specifically trained personnel. Child victims of trafficking for sexual purposes have suffered physical and emotional abuse of an extreme kind. When such abuses occur at a young age, the consequences are devastating and can affect many aspects of a child s life. Specialised psychological support delivered by trained professionals is necessary to assist the child in successful and long-term recovery. 16

17 D. THE PROGRESS CARD SYSTEM Following is an example of a country progress card for Hong Kong. The level of State action for each indicator under Goal 3 is visually illustrated through colour-coding: GOAL 3 HONG KONG 3.1. Helpline 3.2. Shelters 3.3. Medical Services 3.4. Counselling Services Q Q Two helplines are operated in Hong Kong. One is operated by the Hong Kong Police Force, which offers tips for protecting oneself from being trafficked. If a person feels they have been trafficked, they should call the Hong Kong Police Force at (Organized Crime and Triad Bureau). The other hotline is operated by the NGO Action for REACH OUT (Rights of Entertainers in Asia to Combat Human Oppression and Unjust Treatment). However these are not specifically focused on providing specialised assistance to children and are not widely publicised. Under the Protection of Children and Juveniles Ordinance, child victims of trafficking may be admitted to three refuge centres, one of which is operated by an NGO, with the other two operated by the Social Welfare Department. While at the shelters, victims are provided with governmentsponsored assistance that includes financial and legal assistance and counselling and psychological support. However, these shelters are not specialised and child victims of trafficking may not be cared for by personnel specifically trained on the particular needs and trauma that these children are enduring. In addition, it is reported that the Hong Kong Government did not demonstrate sufficient tangible progress in protecting and assisting trafficking victims in the past year. Any child victim in need of care should be able to receive free medical treatment even if illegally residing in Hong Kong. However, it is necessary to make an assessment of the actual opportunities child victims of trafficking can receive to determine whether these medical services are offered without discrimination in Hong Kong. When victims are identified by the Government, they are provided with Governmentsponsored assistance including shelter, financial and legal assistance, counselling, and psychological support. However, while these services exist, they are not always specialised enough to respond to the particular support needs of child victims of sex trafficking and further efforts are necessary to adequately assist child victims in overcoming their trauma. Progress card- Hong Kong: compiled based on information provided by Priscilla Liu, Against Child Abuse (ACA), Hong Kong. GREEN: significant level of state action, resulting in compliance with international standards, directly contributing to a notable performance in the related field assessed by the indicator; YELLOW: some level of state action but not yet specific or comprehensive enough to ensure significant positive outcomes for children; and RED: inadequate level of state action, resulting in a poor level of prevention of child trafficking or protection and assistance of child victims. Q : work primarily undertaken by NGOs to compensate for level of state action. The specific country-level analysis will be regularly reviewed and monitored through the progress cards and centralised in a database where aggregated information will help inform local and global advocacy agendas. Through a coherent system of scrutiny of measures implemented to fulfil international commitments, states will be regularly engaged to share information on their actions to secure a safer environment for children and protection from trafficking for sexual purposes while the support of civil society, through its work, will also be featured. 17

18 HOPELESS CAUSE OR CAUSE FOR HOPE? This section presents aggregated results from an initial group of 41 countries reviewed for this project. 18 These countries were chosen on the basis of data availability and the presence of The Body Shop stores and ECPAT network groups and as such, act as a representative sample of the overall global collaboration. The countries were considered in relation to the three goals on prevention, protection and assistance (and defined by four indicators each), which form the backbone of governmental action aimed at eradicating trafficking in children for sexual purposes. The examination of the progress accomplished under each indicator of the three goals revealed various degrees of state policies and programmes to prevent child trafficking and protect the victims: almost 1 in 5 countries have made limited progress to adequately combat child trafficking, while only 12% have made notable efforts to provide appropriate child protection frameworks to victims and to prevent trafficking in children. However, it is encouraging and noteworthy to see that half of the States reviewed have put in place some measures, albeit at times too general and broad to adequately respond to the specific needs of child victims and to address the distinctive aspects of child trafficking. Nevertheless, this demonstrates potential for increased realisation of a child s right to protection from sexual exploitation. Global Overview Of States Efforts To Combat Child Trafficking* 20% Little Progress 49% Some Progress Notable Progress 20% Significant Progress 12% * based on a review of the 41 countries listed on pp. 4-5 of this report. 18. Except for Goal 1, indicator 1.4 on policy provision for inclusion of CSEC in teachers training curriculum s Goal 3, indicator 3.1 on the establishment of a State-operated helpline for child victims of trafficking where only 40 countries were examined. 18

19 PROGRESS CARDS CONTINUUM Based on the average scoring of States for each of the goals contributing to child protection from sex trafficking, states are presented below in a continuum of efforts to appropriately address child trafficking through various degrees of state policies and programmes. These efforts are also assessed based on the opportunities that states have to generate a greater impact to combat child trafficking and on the scope of the problem identified. Slow Progress Limited Measures Some Progress Notable Efforts Cambodia Cyprus Australia Taiwan Hong Kong Poland Estonia Romania Czech Republic Sweden Norway United Kingdom Mexico Indonesia Spain Belgium Turkey Germany Thailand Denmark Pakistan India France Malaysia Russia Japan Singapore USA The Netherlands South Africa Switzerland Austria Finland Ireland Italy Greece Luxembourg New Zealand Philippines Portugal South Korea From a global analysis of the indicators, it is clear that significant efforts have been made by states in the legal framework and law enforcement aspects. However, it is in the area of assistance to victims that the lack of appropriate measures is the most obvious. Generally speaking, whereas a number of policies and programmes address the overall problem of human trafficking, the specific analysis of the situation of children in relation to these violations has lacked a child focus. Just as analysis of gender dimensions enables us to understand the importance of this factor in determining forms of violence, a child-sensitive lens must be used to analyse and understand trafficking and sexual exploitation crimes perpetrated against children. Children and young people are most vulnerable to trafficking and sexual exploitation when the systems that exist to protect them fail, and these are most likely to fail when all the relevant agencies are not cooperating to create a safety net and when the different actors of child protection (families, communities, state agencies, NGOs and other partners) are not well informed about child trafficking nor adequately trained to prevent it. It is therefore of the utmost importance to create spaces for multi-stakeholder collaboration and to ensure systematic and ongoing training for all partners on child trafficking and the guiding principles and specific rights of the child that should be taken into primary consideration when dealing with at-risk children or victims of trafficking as detailed in the sections below. 19

20 A. PREVENTION: GOAL 1- COMMUNITY-BASED PREVENTION PROGRAMMES TO STOP CHILD TRAFFICKING ARE REACHING AT-RISK POPULATIONS Policy decisions and initiatives under the lens: The adoption of a national plan of action or a national strategy to specifically address child trafficking through community-based prevention programmes that are reaching out to the most vulnerable populations Multi-stakeholder collaboration is adopted to ensure that a comprehensive framework is implemented to prevent child trafficking for sexual purposes Awareness-raising initiatives are implemented and sustained through a combination of means of communication at the different levels Provisions exist to train teachers directly to build their knowledge and capacity to act and to educate students on the dangers of child trafficking Prevention is at the core of child protection policies and is an essential pillar in the fight against child trafficking. Prevention programmes directly support strategies that will stop a child from being trafficked before the abuse takes place. They are therefore crucial and cannot be ignored. Prevention encompasses a range of interventions that will reduce risk factors and promote protective factors to ensure the well-being of children and families. Families and communities can provide the first vanguard in ensuring that protective factors exist to increase the health and well-being of children. The role of the state is to ensure that these factors are positively supported and reinforced through comprehensive strategies. Overview of States efforts to prevent child trafficking based on four indicators* 24% 20% 2% 5% 54% 35% 46% 59% 29% 22% 44% 60% Prevention Collaboration Campaigning Education * based on a review of 41 countries listed on pp. 4-5 of this report. Adequate measures General measures Inadequate measures 20

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